Dil Nawaz
August 26 2007
A young bride goes to live with her husband’s family in Pakistan only
to suffer a nightmarish experience at the hands of religious bigots.
This article gives an exclusive account of the horrors suffered by the
victim(s).
SIXTY YEARS AFTER the
independence, ordinary people still pay the price of religious laws and
bigotry, enacted to prolong the animosity between nations, tribes,
religions, in complete defiance of universal declaration of human
rights and United Nations charter.
M Kaur, her full identity hidden for safety, is a Sikh girl from
Malaysia. She met her husband four years ago in
UK (
United Kingdom) while studying at the university. He was a student from
Pakistan and a Muslim. They had a
UK
registration marriage as well as temple wedding, to keep her parents
happy about the marriage. The husband, after completing his studies had
to return back to
Pakistan, as he could no longer stay in
UK. The bride also followed him to
Pakistan,
to settle down with the in-laws permanently. According to the
interviewer, she had intended to stay there for a long time but when
she arrived there, she had not anticipated the turmoil her presence
would create.
The
happy couple had to face a really ugly situation. The relatives started
threatening them because of religious differences. At the place where
they stayed on rent, their landlord stayed downstairs and happened to
be the grand imam in the
Islamabad
University
mosque. He and his family kept on harassing them and pressurizing her
to convert, at first by giving religious books to study. They also kept
questioning them. They were in the house most of the time constantly
interrogating them. Even when the couple used to go out, they would be
stopped and told that the wife is supposed to keep purdah or veil when
leaving the house and that she should only wear shalwar kameez, keep
her hair long, wear no makeup etc.
This
harassment went on every day. Then came the bombshell that couple were
infidels and had committed blasphemy by insulting the institution of
marriage and that their marriage was illegal. The Shariah law of
Pakistan considers marriage between non- Muslims (Hindus/Sikhs) and Muslims a heresy and adultery punishable by stoning to death. The couple got a threatening letter from a religious party in
Pakistan that they must convert or face the fatwa of death imposed on them.
Some
of the couple’s relatives are in Jamaat-e-Islami. The Imam is from a
part of POK (Pakistan Occupied Kashmir) where Jaish-e-Mohammed is
active. Some of his neighbours are high officials of the Mosque city of
Islamabad.
Others were the students of Jamia Faridia and Lal Masjid, who
disappeared before latest action against the Red Mosque. The Imam is a
close associate of Abdul Aziz and Ghazi Abdul Rashid of the Red Mosque.
Ms.
Kaur’s parents-in-law suffered total social boycott in the area due to
the Imam and their hostile relatives. During Friday sermons, local
mosques started naming them without taking names that non-Muslims were
spreading filth and obscenity by luring Muslim youngsters on
loudspeakers.
Due to the increasing magnitude of harassment and the threats, Ms. Kaur decided to leave
Pakistan within three weeks of arriving and came back to
UK.
A few days before this, young men hiding their faces in scarves, with
their beards showing underneath and threatening that he will be killed
soon, beat up her husband quite badly. Fearing for their lives family
(in-laws) went into hiding.
The
Sikh wife, while in UK, appealed to the Amnesty International and the
Chief Justice of Pakistan to take note of their situation, but none of
the newspapers printed her story due to fear of a Taliban reprisal.
Murtads or infidels who change their religion are punishable by death penalty in
Pakistan’s Shariat courts.